All-Terrain Transport Vehicles are transforming how emergency teams reach injured hikers in remote mountain ranges. When avalanches block roads, Transport Vehicles equipped with wide tracks and 4×4 drivetrains climb snow-covered slopes that defeat conventional ambulances. A recent incident in the Colorado Rockies saw Transport Vehicles carry paramedics and heated litters to a stranded party at 11,000 feet within forty minutes, cutting traditional response time by two-thirds. Each unit features a modular medical bay, allowing Transport Vehicles to switch from mass-casualty benches to a single intensive-care capsule. Onboard oxygen generators, defibrillators, and satellite uplinks ensure that Transport Vehicles become rolling emergency rooms. Winches rated at 12,000 pounds allow Transport Vehicles to lower rescuers down cliff faces and haul victims back up. After Hurricane Ida, Transport Vehicles ferried dialysis patients across flooded Louisiana highways when bridges collapsed. Crews praise Transport Vehicles for their amphibious hulls that ford rivers without stalling engines or soaking medical supplies. State emergency management directors now budget for fleets of Transport Vehicles because one platform replaces separate snowcats, boats, and helicopters for most missions. Training academies report that operators master Transport Vehicles in just twenty hours thanks to intuitive joystick steering and automatic terrain scanning. As climate change increases extreme weather, experts predict demand for Transport Vehicles will double within five years, solidifying their role as the Swiss-army-knife of disaster response.